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[2012] NSWCA 297
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Registrar-General of New South Wales v Cihan [2012] NSWCA 297 (20 September 2012)
Last Updated: 26 September 2012
Case Title:
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Registrar-General of New South Wales v Cihan
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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Decision Date:
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Jurisdiction:
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Allsop P (at [1]), Barrett JA (at [2]), Tobias AJA (at
[71])
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Decision:
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1. Grant leave to appeal. 2. Direct that a
notice of appeal be filed within seven days. 3. Appeal allowed. 4. Set
aside the orders made in the Equity Division on 24 November 2011. 5. Order
that the questions for separate determination be answered as
follows: Question 1: On the assumption that a valid easement existed over a
lane ten feet wide and a passageway five feet wide burdening the
plaintiff's
land and benefiting the second, third and fourth defendants' land at the time
the plaintiff's land was brought under
the provisions of the Real Property
Act 1900, does the notification in item 2 in the second schedule of
folio identifier E/23162 record such an easement? Answer to Question 1:
Yes. Question 2: Has the easement in favour of the second, third and fourth
defendants' land been omitted from folio identifier E/23162
within the meaning
of s 42(1)(a1) of the Real Property Act 1900? Answer to
Question 2: No .6. Order that Mehmet Cihan pay the Registrar-General's
costs of the appeal and the application for leave to appeal. [Note:
The Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 provide (Rule 36.11) that unless the
Court otherwise orders, a judgment or order is taken to be entered when it is
recorded in the Court's computerised
court record system. Setting aside and
variation of judgments or orders is dealt with by Rules 36.15, 36.16, 36.17 and
36.18. Parties should in particular note the time limit of fourteen days in Rule
36.16.]
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Catchwords:
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REAL PROPERTY - Torrens system - easements --
easement created when both dominant and servient tenements held under Old System
title
- all land later converted to Torrens title and subdivided - current folio
relating to servient tenement issued in 2008 - folio notes
as an affecting
encumbrance or interest "Easement affecting the land shown so burdened in Vol
6451 Fol 53" - that immediately preceding
folio contains a short description of
the easement but does not identify any dominant tenement - general description
of benefited
land available from an earlier folio identified in the immediately
preceding folio - whether easement "recorded in" the current folio
- whether
easement "omitted" - WORDS AND PHRASES - "recorded in"
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Legislation Cited:
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Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW), s 181A(1) and
Schedule 8 Conveyancing and Law of Property Act 1884 (Tas), s 34A and
Schedule 8 Land Titles Act 1925 (ACT), s 81 and Schedule 1 Property
Legislation Amendment (Easements) Act 1995 Real Property Act 1862, s
40 Real Property Act 1900, ss 31B(2), 32(1), 32(5), 40 (1B), 42(1), 80A, 96B,
129(1) Real Property Act 1886 (SA), s 89 and Schedule 5 Real Property
(Computer Register) Amendment Act 1979 Transfer of Land Act 1958 (Vic), s
72(3) and Twelfth Schedule Transfer of Land Act 1893 (WA), s 65(3) and Ninth
Schedule
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Cases Cited:
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Texts Cited:
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J Baalman and T Le M Wells, The Practice of the Land
Titles Office (New South Wales) (1934) Peter Butt, Land Law, 6th ed
(2010) W N Harrison, "The Transformation of Torrens's System into the Torrens
System" (1961-1964) 4 University of Queensland Law Journal 125Pamela
O'Connor, "Double Indemnity - Title Insurance and the Torrens System" (2003) 3
Queensland University of Technology Law and Justice Journal 141  Charles
Sweet, "The Land Transfer Acts" (1908) 24 Law Quarterly Review 26Arthur
Underhill, "Can an Easement be Granted in Perpetuity Without Words of
Limitation?" (1908) 24 Law Quarterly Review 199F Ticehurst, Baalman and
Wells Land Titles Office Practice (fifth edition, current looseleaf) T
Cyprian Williams, "The Creation of Easements" (1908) 24 Law Quarterly Review
264Bruce H Ziff, "A Matter of Overriding Interests: Unregistered Easements
under Alberta's Land Titles System" (1991) 23 Alberta Law Review 718
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Category:
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Parties:
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Registrar-General of New South Wales -
Appellant Mehmet Cihan - Respondent
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Representation
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H Altan - Appellant D L Warren -
Respondent
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- Solicitors:
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Land & Property Information Legal Services -
Appellant MCK Lawyers - Respondent
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File number(s):
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Decision Under Appeal
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- Court / Tribunal:
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- Date of Decision:
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- Citation:
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- Court File Number(s)
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Publication Restriction:
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JUDGMENT
- ALLSOP
P: I agree with Barrett JA.
- BARRETT
JA: The applicant, Registrar-General of New South Wales, contends that
Windeyer AJ answered incorrectly two questions that became the
subject of an
order for separate determination in proceedings in the Equity
Division.
- The
Registrar-General's application for leave to appeal and the appeal itself were
heard concurrently.
- The
questions for separate determination were framed on a stated assumption that a
valid easement had been created so as to burden
certain land in the City of
Sydney at a time when the title to both that land and the land in favour of
which the easement was created
was common law or Old System title. All relevant
land is now held under the provisions of the Real Property Act
1900.
- The
questions the primary judge was required to answer, on that assumption, were,
first, whether the notification currently appearing
in folio identifier E/23162
(the land in which includes the easement site) "records" the easement in
question and, second, whether
there has been an "omission" of the easement.
Those questions are relevant to the operation of s 42(1) of the Real Property
Act in ways to be mentioned presently.
- His
Honour answered the questions by saying that folio identifier E/23162 does not
"record" the easement and that there has been "omission"
of it.
- Both
the original dominant tenement and the parcel which included the original
servient tenement were subdivided after the creation
of the easement. The
proceedings in the Equity Division were brought by the current registered
proprietor of the subdivided lot within
which the easement site now lies, that
is, lot E in deposited plan 23162 which is the whole of the land now comprised
in folio identifier
E/23162. The defendants are the Registrar-General and the
current registered proprietors of the subdivided lots that together make
up the
larger parcel of land that was the original dominant tenement.
- On
the face of the pleadings, the plaintiff seeks to establish that the landowner
defendants and their successors as registered proprietors
of those subdivided
lots do not enjoy the benefit of any easement burdening land of which the
plaintiff is currently the registered
proprietor; while the landowner
defendants, by their cross claim, contend that they are entitled to the benefit
of the easement.
- The
landowner defendants are not parties to the appeal. This, it appears, is because
the plaintiff has come to accept that his land
is burdened by an easement in
favour of the landowner defendants. Although there may be dispute as to the
precise legal basis on
which the easement binds the plaintiff's land, resolution
of that issue is apparently seen as going only to the question whether
the
plaintiff is entitled to compensation from the Torrens Assurance Fund controlled
by the Registrar-General. The plaintiff seeks
declaratory relief accordingly
against the Registrar-General.
The easement and the entries concerning it
- Two
adjoining areas make up the land burdened by the easement as originally created.
One is a strip of land ten feet wide and about
111 feet long running parallel to
(and to the west of) the western side of George Street, Sydney (adjacent to its
intersection with
Liverpool Street) and opening on to Liverpool Street. The
other is a strip of land five feet wide and about 16 feet long running
into the
first strip at right angles from the west. These areas are referred to as the
sites of a lane and a passage respectively.
- The
easement was created by grant in conveyance registered number 964 book 237 dated
14 January 1882 by which land having the western
side of George Street as its
eastern boundary was conveyed by Robert Chadwick to John Valentine Hinton.
Adjoining land to the west
also owned by Chadwick was retained by him. The
easement site lay within that retained land. The part of the easement site
consisting
of the lane was contiguous with the conveyed land for part of its
length. For a distance of about 56 feet from its southern end at
Liverpool
Street, the eastern boundary of that part of the easement site corresponded with
the western boundary of the conveyed land.
- The
operative part of the conveyance was:
"Doth grant bargain sell alien enfeoff release and confirm unto the said
purchaser and his heirs All that piece or parcel of land
situate and lying and
being in the Parish of St Andrew in the County of Cumberland Colony of New South
Wales [described by metes
and bounds] as the land is delineated in the plan
hereon endorsed and therein edged red with full and free liberty and free
licence
for the said Purchaser his appointees heirs and assigns and his and
their servants and workmen and for all other persons authorised
by him or them
with or without labourers carts and carriages horses or other animals by night
and by day to drive ride operate and
labour up down to and fro and upon the lane
ten feet wide running along the west boundary of the said land to Liverpool
Street and
delineated in the said plan and coloured yellow and the passage five
feet wide running at right angles to the said lane as delineated
in the said
plan and therein coloured yellow. . . To have and to hold the said land
messuages hereditaments and all and singular
the premises hereinbefore described
and intended to be hereby assured with appurtenances unto the said Purchaser and
his heirs .
. ."
- The
easement provided for the land fronting George Street acquired by Hinton from
Chadwick a means of rear access from and egress
to Liverpool Street over the
relevant part of Chadwick's retained land lying to the west.
- The
separate questions that the primary judge was required to answer were posed on
the express assumption that the easement was validly
created. Implicit in that
assumption is the proposition that the relevant part of Chadwick's retained land
was burdened by the easement,
that the benefit of the easement was appurtenant
to the land conveyed by Chadwick to Hinton and that that position pertained when
all relevant land was later converted to Torrens title. I proceed accordingly.
- The
land retained by Chadwick (of which the easement site formed part) was converted
to Torrens title in 1891. Certificate of title
volume 1022 folio 161 declared
Chadwick to be the registered proprietor "subject to such encumbrances, liens
and interests as are
notified herein". Under a heading "Notification referred
to" there appeared the following:
"Subject to full and free liberty and licence for William Henry Hinton and
Frederick William Mackey the owners of the land adjoining
the south eastern side
of the land above described their heirs and assigns and their servants and
workmen and for all other persons
authorised by them with or without labourers
carts and carriages horses or other animals at all times by night and by day to
drive
ride operate and labour up and down to and fro over the lane ten feet wide
and the passage five feet wide coloured brown on plan
hereon."
- The
primary judge surmised that William Henry Hinton and Mackey may have been
executors of the will of John Valentine Hinton and noted
that the plan on the
certificate of title clearly showed the land the subject of the
easement.
- The
land in this volume 1022 folio 161 was later subdivided by deposited plan 23162
into five lots, A, B, C, D and E. The easement
site was wholly within lot E.
Volume 6451 folio 53 was issued in respect of lot E in 1952. It carried the
following notification:
"Subject to full and free liberty and licence for William Henry Hinton and
Francis William Mackey their heirs and assigns and their
servants and workmen
and for all other persons authorised by them with or without labourers carts and
carriages horses or other animals
at all times by night and by day to drive ride
operate and labor up and down to and fro over the land ten feet wide and the
passage
five feet wide coloured brown on the plan hereon."
- Again,
the site of the easement was clearly depicted in a plan on the certificate of
title.
- The
current folio of the register relating to lot E is folio identifier E/23162. It
was issued in 2008. Recorded on it as an encumbrance
or interest is the
following:
"Easement affecting the land shown so burdened in Vol 6451 Fol 53".
- A
person searching the title of lot E today, therefore, is put on notice by the
content of the current folio of the register relating
to the lot that it is
burdened by an easement and that further information about the easement may be
obtained by inspecting volume
6451 folio 53.
The separate questions in context
- The
significance of the questions for separate determination, as between the
plaintiff and the landowner defendants, is made clear
by s 42(1) of the Real
Property Act, the provision central to the Act's system of indefeasibility
of registered title. The part of s 42(1) relevant to this case
is:
"Notwithstanding the existence in any other person of any estate or interest
which but for this Act might be held to be paramount
or to have priority, the
registered proprietor for the time being of any estate or interest in land
recorded in a folio of the Register
shall, except in case of fraud, hold the
same, subject to such other estates and interests and such entries, if any, as
are recorded
in that folio, but absolutely free from all other estates and
interests that are not so recorded except:
. . .
(a1)in the case of the omission or misdescription of an easement subsisting
immediately before the land was brought under the provisions
of this Act or
validly created at or after that time under this or any other Act or a
Commonwealth Act,
. . ."
- Thus,
if an easement burdening land existed immediately before conversion of the land
to Torrens title, the registered proprietor
holds subject to the easement if
either of two conditions is satisfied: if the estate or interest constituted by
or arising from
the easement is "recorded" in the folio of the register relating
to the land; or if there is "omission" of the easement from the
folio of the
register relating to the land.
- Paragraph
(a1) was added to s 42(1) of the Real Property Act by the Property
Legislation Amendment (Easements) Act 1995. Professor Butt, at [20
85] of Peter Butt, Land Law, 6th ed (2010), says that, as regards
easements predating the bringing of the burdened land under the provisions of
the Real Property Act, s 42(1)(a1) "merely codifies the law that had
developed under the former s 42(1)(b)" - a provision, it may be noted, that had
a counterpart in the original Torrens legislation of New South Wales. Section 40
of the
Real Property Act 1862 caused a registered proprietor to
hold:
"subject to such encumbrances liens estates or interests as may be notified
on the folium of the Register Book constituted by the
grant or certificate of
title of such land but absolutely free from all other encumbrances liens estates
or interests whatsoever
. . . except as regards the omission or
misdescription of any right of way or other easement created in or existing upon
any land . . ." (emphasis added)
- The
exception causing omitted or misdescribed easements to affect land despite their
not being notified on the register was, by the
time of the enactment of the
Real Property Act 1862, an established feature of Torrens system
legislation. Professor Harrison noted in W N Harrison, "The Transformation of
Torrens's
System into the Torrens System" (1961-1964) 4 University of
Queensland Law Journal 125 that the exception was introduced in South
Australia in December 1858 as one of many amendments to the first Real
Property Act which had been assented to in January of that year. Harrison
says of the particular amendment (at 130):
"It was not necessary to make the protection of a registered proprietor so
absolute that a neighbour should be deprived of an easement
merely because it
had been omitted from the certificate."
- Section
42(1)(a1) makes a particular kind of interest in Torrens system land valid and
effective despite lack of recording and registration.
It creates, in the form of
an exception to indefeasibility, what is sometimes called an "overriding
interest", that is, a valid and
effective property right that does not derive
from any recording on the title: see the discussion by Pamela O'Connor, "Double
Indemnity
- Title Insurance and the Torrens System"
(2003) 3 Queensland
University of Technology Law and Justice Journal 141
at 152 and Bruce H
Ziff, "A Matter of Overriding Interests: Unregistered Easements under Alberta's
Land Titles System" (1991) 23 Alberta Law Review 718.
- The
present appeal was approached on both sides on the footing that one of two
findings must eventuate: either that the interest referable
to the 1882 easement
is "recorded in" folio identifier E/23162 or that the easement is "omitted from"
that folio. The relevant concept
of omission was recently explored by this Court
in Sahab Holdings Pty Ltd v Registrar-General [2011] NSWCA 395 at [251]
and following.
- The
possibility that it might be established in the Equity Division proceedings
that, because the case is one of omission, the plaintiff's
land is burdened by
an "overriding interest" of each of the landowner defendants pursuant to s
42(1)(a1) provides the basis for the
plaintiff's alternative claim against the
Registrar-General in those proceedings. That claim is based on s 129(1) of the
Real Property Act:
"Any person who suffers loss or damage as a result of the operation of this
Act in respect of any land, where the loss or damage arises
from:
(a) any act or omission of the Registrar-General in the execution or
performance of his or her functions or duties under this Act
in relation to the
land, or
(b) the registration (otherwise than under section 45E) of some other person
as proprietor of the land, or of any estate or interest
in the land, or
(c) any error, misdescription or omission in the Register in relation to the
land, or
(d) the land having been brought under the provisions of this Act, or
(e) the person having been deprived of the land, or of any estate or interest
in the land, as a consequence of fraud, or
(f) an error or omission in an official search in relation to the land,
or
(g) any error of the Registrar-General in recording details supplied in the
notice referred to in section 39 (1B),
is entitled to payment of compensation from the Torrens Assurance Fund."
- If,
in accordance with the decision of the primary judge, the separate questions are
answered in the way stated at [6] above, there
may be grounds for a finding that
the plaintiff has suffered loss or damage arising from one of these s 129(1)
matters. That, of
course, is not a matter that is before this Court. It is
relevant only as context.
The decision at first instance
- The
primary judge referred to s 40(1B) of the Act. That section was introduced by
the Real Property (Computer Register) Amendment Act 1979. It is in
the following terms:
"Where, in a manual folio or computer folio certificate, the estate or
interest of a registered proprietor is expressed to be subject
to:
(a) an estate or interest evidenced by an instrument,
(b) a provision of an instrument, or
(c) an enumerated provision of an Act or of an Act of the Parliament of the
Commonwealth,
the whole of the contents of the instrument, provision or enumerated
provision, as the case may be, shall be deemed to be set forth
at length in the
folio or certificate."
- The
judge proceeded on the basis that, because folio identifier E/23162 expresses
the registered proprietor's interest to be subject
to the interest described in
it as "Easement affecting the land shown so burdened in Vol 6451 Fol 53", s
40(1B) causes the content
of volume 6451 folio 53 to be "set forth at length in"
folio identifier E/23162.
- The
primary judge was of the view that volume 6451 folio 53 contains an incomplete
or insufficient description of the easement. The
wording of that description is
set out at [17] above. The problem identified by the judge is that, while that
wording refers to "full
and free liberty and licence for William Henry Hinton
and Francis William Mackey their heirs and assigns and their servants and
workmen
and for all other persons authorised by them" to pass and repass over
the lane and the passage shown in brown on the endorsed plan,
it does not
identify any land as enjoying the benefit of the right or, for that matter,
suggest that the right is appurtenant to
land as distinct from being merely a
personal right of the named persons.
- The
judge proceeded on the footing that the same deficiency affected the description
in the original volume 1022 folio 161 (that is,
the certificate issued upon
conversion to Torrens title and, as to the land concerned, superseded by volume
6451 folio 53 in 1952).
That, however, was a misapprehension on the judge's
part. The description in volume 1022 folio 161 (set out at [15] above) referred
to "full and free liberty and licence for William Henry Hinton and Frederick
William Mackey the owners of the land adjoining the south eastern side of the
land above described their heirs and assigns . . ." (emphasis added). There
was thus a description of a dominant tenement by reference to not only named
owners but also location vis-a-vis the land in the certificate of title.
- The
position is accordingly that the description the judge regarded as incomplete or
deficient appears in the prior volume 6451 folio
53 to which attention is now
expressly directed by the notation on folio identifier E/23162, but that the
same element of incompleteness
or insufficiency did not affect the originally
issued folio (volume 1022 folio 161 issued in 1891 and superseded in 1952) to
which,
of course, attention is not directed by the current folio identifier
E/23162.
- The
judge regarded the element of incompleteness or deficiency in volume 6451 folio
53 as fatal to any conclusion that the interest
constituted by the benefit of
the easement was "recorded in" the current folio identifier E/23162. He noted
that inspection of volume
6451 folio 53, to which attention was specifically
directed, would not have identified any land as land to which the benefit of the
easement was appurtenant. He also noted that further searches may have allowed
such identification to be made. The conclusion was
then stated:
"By failing to indicate on Volume 6451 Folio 53 the dominant tenement or in
the alternative the instrument creating the easement,
that interest was not
recorded on the Register."
- The
finding of omission followed as a corollary.
The recording and the construction of it
- The
question posed by s 42(1) (and the first of the questions for separate
determination) is whether the interest in the plaintiff's
lot E subsisting in
the landowner defendants by reason of the 1882 easement is "recorded in the
folio of the Register" relating to
the plaintiff's lot E.
- The
folio created in 2008 is one of the many folios that, along with certain other
instruments and records make up "the Register"
as referred to in s 31B(2).
Creation of the folio in 2008 must be taken to have occurred pursuant to s
32(1):
"The Registrar-General creates a folio of the Register for land by making a
record of:
(a) a description of the land and of the estate or interest therein for which
it is created,
(b) a description of the proprietor for the time being of the estate or
interest and the fact that any such proprietor is a minor
if the
Registrar-General knows that to be the case, and
(c) such particulars, as the Registrar-General thinks fit, of:
(i) other estates or interests, if any, affecting the land, and
(ii) other information, if any, that relates to the land or any estate or
interest therein and is included in that record pursuant
to this or any other
Act (including an Act of the Parliament of the Commonwealth) or an instrument
made under any such Act,
and by allocating a distinctive reference to the record so made."
- The
creation of the new folio in 2008 gave rise to an obligation of the
Registrar-General under s 32(5):
"Where, under this Act, the Registrar-General creates a new folio of the
Register for land contained in a previously created folio
of the Register, the
Registrar-General shall appropriately cancel the previously created folio and
may, for the purposes of this
subsection, require the production to the
Registrar-General of any certificate of title."
- Before
the advent of computerised folios, each folio generally consisted of an original
certificate of title which was bound into
and formed part of the register book.
A "duplicate" certificate of title was issued to the registered proprietor.
References in these
reasons to a particular certificate of title are references
to the folio of the register constituted by the original of that certificate
forming part of the register book.
- The
presence on the current folio of the notation set out at [19] above implies that
the Registrar-General was satisfied that an interest
arising from an easement as
described in that notation affected lot E. I say this because, under s
32(1)(c)(i), a "record" of "such
particulars, as the Registrar-General thinks
fit" of "other estates and interests ... affecting the land" to which the folio
relates
is part of the statutorily required content of a folio at the time of
its creation.
- It
can thus be seen that the Registrar-General, when determining the content to be
included in the new folio upon its creation in
2008, not only thought it fit to
include a reference to refer to something "affecting" land in the folio but also
described the affecting
item as "Easement".
- The
plaintiff does not argue that the relevant part of lot E is not burdened by an
interest of the persons enjoying the benefit of
the easement created by the
conveyance of 1882. The plaintiff says, rather, that the interest in the
burdened lot E flowing from
the continuing existence of the easement is not
"recorded in" the folio for lot E, so that that the easement is not an interest
"subject
to" which the plaintiff holds his estate in fee simple. A corollary is
that, if the fact that the interest is not "recorded in" the
folio means that
there is, as referred to in s 42(1)(a1), "omission" of the easement, the
effectiveness of the interest comes only
from its being an "overriding interest"
of the kind referred to at [25] above.
- Given
the form of the notation on the current folio for lot E, s 40(1B) causes the
content of volume 6451 folio 53 to be available
for the purpose of construing
that notation. When the content of volume 6451 folio 53 is taken into account,
the plaintiff points
out, no reference to any easement is found. Rather there is
reference to "full and free liberty and licence" for two named persons
"their
heirs and assigns" and the "servants and workmen" of those two persons (and of
their heirs and assigns) and "for all other
persons authorised by" those two
persons (and by their heirs and assigns) to use the lane and the passage; and
those words do not
indicate that any easement as such has been granted. The
"liberty and licence" might well entail, it is said, a mere personal
right.
- Four
particular indicators point strongly against this construction of the message
conveyed by a combination of the recording on folio
identifier E/23162 and the
content of volume 6451 folio 53 to which s 40(1B) causes to be available for the
purpose of construing
that recording. I shall consider them in
turn.
The first indicator
- The
first indicator is the word "Easement" in folio identifier E/23162 itself.
Because of s 32(1)(c)(i), this shows, as I have said,
that the Registrar-General
has formed an opinion that there is an affecting interest and that it is an
easement.
- The
plaintiff says that the Registrar-General's opinion is not binding or
conclusive. That must be so. But the description "Easement"
is of particular
significance in determining the message conveyed by the
notation.
The second indicator
- The
second indicator is use of the words "full and free liberty and licence" in the
relevant part of volume 6451 folio 53. Those or
like words, while capable of
denoting a licence or personal right, have long been employed in the drafting of
easements. Statutes
enabling the creation of easements of various kinds by means
of short forms of words commonly import a long form that includes "full
and free
right and liberty": see, for example, Transfer of Land Act 1958
(Vic), s 72(3) and Twelfth Schedule; Real Property Act 1886 (SA), s 89
and Schedule 5; Transfer of Land Act 1893 (WA), s 65(3) and Ninth
Schedule; Land Titles Act 1925 (ACT), s 81 and Schedule 1. In each
of these cases, the short form "right of carriageway" imports a long form that
includes "full and free right
and liberty". In New South Wales and Tasmania, the
equivalent long form is "full and free right": Conveyancing Act 1919
(NSW), s 181A(1) and Schedule 8; Conveyancing and Law of Property Act
1884 (Tas), s 34A and Schedule 8.
- The
practice of conveyancers in and about the creation of easements may be taken to
be reflected by words appearing in the suggested
form of grant by transfer under
the Real Property Act set out in J Baalman and T Le M Wells, The
Practice of the Land Titles Office (New South Wales) (1934) at
109:
". . . do hereby transfer and grant to the said transferee out of all such my
estate and interest in the land mentioned in the schedule
following . . . full
and free right as appurtenant to the land comprised in certificate of title . .
."
The third indicator
- The
third indicator comes from the use of the words "and their heirs and assigns" in
the description in volume 6451 folio 53. As was
pointed out in Fejo v
Northern Territory of Australia [1998] HCA 58; (1998) 195 CLR 96 at [11],
"[w]ords of limitation in the form 'to A his heirs and assigns for ever' have
long been recognised as conveying an estate in fee
simple". The common law was
very particular about the use of the words "and his heirs". A grant to A and his
"heir" in the singular
(Chambers v Taylor [1837] EngR 411; (1837) 2 My & Cr 376; 40 ER
683) and a testamentary gift of land to A without words of limitation (Doe d
Howell v Kennedy [1840] NSWSupC 13; (1840) NSW Sel Cas (Dowling) 979)
created a life estate only.
- In
the Law Quarterly Review of January 1908, the editor of Challis's Law of Real
Property referred to a "delusion" of conveyancers "that proper words of
limitation are necessary to create an easement in fee": Charles Sweet,
"The Land
Transfer Acts" (1908) 24 Law Quarterly Review 26 at 28n. The author of
Underhill's Law Relating to Trusts and Trustees responded with an
observation that "the practice of conveyancers in using words of limitation in
the creation of easements de novo has been merely ex abundati
cautela". He said that there is "not a scrap of authority" that such words
are necessary in that context: Arthur Underhill, "Can an Easement
be Granted in
Perpetuity Without Words of Limitation?" (1908) 24 Law Quarterly Review
199.
- This
brought a spirited riposte from the author of A Treatise on the Law of Vendor
and Purchaser, T Cyprian Williams, who, in "The Creation of Easements"
(1908) 24 Law Quarterly Review 264, said:
"The case therefore seems to stand thus: Words of inheritance are necessary
for the grant of an estate in fee simple in things which
lie in grant. Easements
are things which lie in grant. The conclusion to be drawn seems obvious."
- The
controversy about the need for words of limitation for the creation of easements
came in the wake of the recognition of easements
as incorporeal hereditaments in
the later part of the nineteenth century: see, for example, Hill v Midland
Railway Co (1882) 21 Ch D 143; Jones v Watts (1890) 43 Ch D 574.
Easements lay in grant, not in livery and the argument in favour of words of
limitation was compelling.
- It
is not necessary to resolve the argument here. For present purposes, the
important point is that, in the late nineteenth century,
it had long been the
practice of conveyancers to use the traditional words of limitation (to A "and
his heirs and assigns") when
drawing conveyances by which an easement was
created by grant. This was recognised by Bryson J in A Victor Leggo & Co
Pty Ltd v Aerosols of Australia Pty Ltd (1986) NSW ConvR 55-293 at
56,712:
"[I]t appears to have been common, in the nineteenth century and since, to go
to some lengths, in a transfer which was intended to
create an easement, to
establish the estate for which the easement was to be held, either by stating in
terms that it was to be held
in fee simple or by stating at length the words of
limitation which would have been required for a conveyance of a general law
title."
- The
words of limitation were quite inapt where a mere licence or personal right was
to be created.
The fourth indicator
- The
fourth indicator comes from the plan endorsed on volume 6451 folio 53. The lane
and the passage run through lot E from Liverpool
Street. Land other than land
forming part of lot E itself adjoins the easement site at three places: first,
at the Liverpool Street
frontage, second, at the end of the lane distant from
Liverpool Street and, third, at the end of the passage distant from Liverpool
Street.
- The
physical layout is such that the only conceivable purpose of the lane and the
passage is to allow access from Liverpool Street
to the land at the ends of the
lane and the passage distant from that street and corresponding egress from that
land to the street.
The narrow strips of land cannot otherwise be
useful.
- The
plan itself thus justifies an inference that each of the lane and the passage
serves a purpose of accommodating the adjoining
land lying at the end of it. It
is of the essence of an easement that it is "beneficial to the land and
beneficial in respect of
the ownership of the land, and not beneficial to any
other person": Bailey v Stephens [1862] EngR 627; (1862) 12 CB (NS) 91; 142 ER 1077 per
Willes J at 1085. The physical circumstances here indicate that the lane and the
passage are beneficial only to
the adjoining land to and from which they
run.
Discussion
- The
matters just canvassed indicate that, according to the endorsement on folio
identifier E/23162, construed with the aid of s 40(1B), lot E is affected or
encumbered by something that the Registrar-General has assessed to be an
easement, that the description that
s 40(1B) causes to be incorporated uses
forms of words traditionally employed in the creation of easements as distinct
from mere licences
and that the physical layout shown by the plan that s 40(1B)
causes to be incorporated is such as to imply quite clearly that the right in
respect of the affected part of lot E serves a purpose
of accommodating or
benefiting land adjoining lot E at the ends of the lane and the passage distant
from Liverpool Street.
- This,
to my mind, is sufficient to warrant a conclusion that the easement created in
1882 is "recorded in" folio identifier E/23162.
- I
acknowledge, of course, that the recording, thus understood, does not include
any explicit description of the benefited land. As
the primary judge correctly
observed, the identification of a dominant tenement is an essential element of
the valid creation of
an easement. But the question now under consideration is
not as to the valid creation of the easement. It is accepted that there
was
valid creation in 1882, with the parcel then conveyed to Hinton (and now
subdivided into the several lots of which the landowner
defendants are the
registered proprietors) as the dominant tenement. The question of present
relevance goes to the description of
the easement.
- The
apparent deficiency in the explicit description is, in my opinion, not fatal to
the conclusion that the easement is "recorded",
particularly when it is
recognised that the missing information is readily obtainable by means that the
available material provide.
- Both
parties referred in submissions to Bursill Enterprises Pty Ltd v Berger Bros
Trading Pty Ltd [1971] HCA 9; (1971) 124 CLR 73, a case examined by the
primary judge. The question there was whether an interest in a stratum of land
occupied by an adjoining building
was "notified upon the folium of the Register
Book" relating to the land concerned. There was in fact a notation that referred
to
a right of way created by a particularly identified instrument. There was no
reference to the additional interest relating to the
stratum that had been
created by the same instrument. The High Court held, by majority, that the
affecting interest in the stratum
was notified on the relevant folio. Barwick CJ
said (at 77):
"It seems to me that it was not intended that the certificate of title alone
should provide a purchaser dealing with the registered
proprietor with all the
information necessary to be known to comprehend the extent or state of that
proprietor's title to the land.
The dealings once registered became themselves
part of the Register Book. It was therefore sufficient that their registration
should
be by statement of their nature recorded on the certificate of
title."
- Windeyer
J said (at 93):
"It seems to me that, at any time from 1872 till today, a prudent conveyancer
acting for a purchaser of the land that is now Bursill's
would have ascertained
what it was that transfer 7922 referred to on the vendor's certificate of title
in law effected. True he might
have been surprised to discover all that his
search revealed. But surely no prudent person, seeing the reference to a right
of way,
would neglect to ascertain what exactly was the nature of the right of
way, the land subject to it, the persons who could avail themselves
of it, for
what purposes in what manner and at what times."
- The
concept here is that "notification" (or, as it is today, "recording") is
sufficiently made if particulars explicitly stated are
such as to engender in
the mind of a reasonable reader generally familiar with property and land titles
a need for further inquiry
by resort to readily available records. In the
present case, the four indicators to which I have referred would show very
clearly
to such a reader the existence of an easement affecting the parts of lot
E consisting of the lane and the passage; and there would
also be a very strong
suspicion that the benefited land (not explicitly identified) was that at the
ends of the lane and the passage
distant from Liverpool Street.
- The
reader in question, being expressly directed to volume 6451 folio 53 (the
content of which was deemed by s 40(1B) to be included in folio identifier
E/23162), would there find, in addition to the four indicators already mentioned
(and the lack
of explicit identification of the dominant tenement), the
following:
"Last Certificate Vol 1022 Fol 161".
- That,
combined with the fact that the relevant endorsement on volume 6451 folio 53 was
obviously placed there upon first creation
of that folio in 1952, would indicate
volume 1022 folio 161 as a source of additional information about the content of
the endorsement.
And, of course, resort to volume 1022 folio 161 would bring to
light the reference to a dominant tenement described as "the land
adjoining the
south eastern side of the land above described", that adjoining land being (or
having once been) owned by William Henry
Hinton and Frederick William Mackey.
- The
primary judge took the view (at [22]) that there was nothing in volume 6451
folio 53 which would enable a purchaser to ascertain
the land, if any, to which
the easement was attached. Having regard to the fact that the relevant notation
was obviously carried
over from the previous folio and that that folio was
expressly identified in volume 6451 folio 53, it seems to me that, as was
submitted
on behalf of the Registrar-General, the means of remedying the
apparent deficiency were available from the current folio, construed
in the
light of s 40(1B).
- It
is relevant to note that, even apart from s 40(1B), the Act itself shows that
resort may be had to material outside the register in construing the content of
the register. Thus, for
example, s 80A allows incorporation by reference in a
dealing of the content of a document that is "filed" but does not form part
of
the register except for the limited purposes of s 96B: see s 80A(3). Also, it is
the practice of the Land Titles Office not to
object to incorporation by
reference in instruments lodged for registration of unregistered documents such
as covenants to observe
the conditions in a common law mortgage: F Ticehurst,
Baalman and Wells Land Titles Office Practice (fifth edition, current
looseleaf) at [240.400].
- The
principle that "the register is everything", to the extent that it may perhaps
be a rough summation of the broad effect of the
statutory provisions, is not
offended by the conclusion that the 1882 easement is, for the reasons I have
stated, "recorded in" folio
identifier E/23162.
Conclusion
- I
propose orders as follows:
1.Grant leave to appeal.
2.Direct that a notice of appeal be filed within seven days.
3.Appeal allowed.
4.Set aside the orders made in the Equity Division on 24 November 2011.
5.Order that the questions for separate determination be answered as
follows:
Question 1: On the assumption that a valid easement existed over a lane ten
feet wide and a passageway five feet wide burdening the
plaintiff's land and
benefiting the second, third and fourth defendants' land at the time the
plaintiff's land was brought under
the provisions of the Real Property
Act 1900, does the notification in item 2 in the second schedule of
folio identifier E/23162 record such an easement?
Answer to Question 1: Yes.
Question 2: Has the easement in favour of the second, third and fourth
defendants' land been omitted from folio identifier E/23162
within the meaning
of s 42(1)(a1) of the Real Property Act 1900?
Answer to Question 2: No.
6.Order that Mehmet Cihan pay the Registrar-General's costs of the appeal and
the application for leave to appeal.
- TOBIAS
AJA: I agree with the orders proposed by Barrett JA for the reasons he has
expressed.
*********
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